What we can do for you

We provide expert consulting and analytical guidance to help researchers and organizations implement spatial cell biology in situ approaches from concept to biological insight. Specifically, we support:

  • Experimental design of in situ strategies, including selection of appropriate markers, cell types, developmental stages, and stress conditions
  • Method implementation and optimization, from sample preparation and in situ protocols to imaging and quantitative acquisition
  • Integration of molecular, spatial, and phenotypic data, linking gene expression, chromatin state, protein localization, and cell geometry within intact tissues
  • Data analysis and interpretation, translating complex spatial datasets into biologically meaningful, cell-type–specific mechanisms

Our goal is not to replace existing molecular methods, but to embed them within a spatial, cell-type–aware framework—so that true biological mechanisms emerge from coordinated cell-to-cell interactions rather than being inferred from population averages.

MethodMain AdvantagesKey limitationsResolutionCitations
Bulk RNA-seq.Simple, cost-effective, widely used; robust for global transcriptional changesAverages signals across all cell types; masks heterogeneity, gradients, and cell–cell interactionsWhole plant/organ/tissue-level, no spatial and single-cell resolutionWang, 2024 Degen & Medo, 2025
scRNA-seq / snRNA-seqResolves heterogeneity; identifies rare cell types; developmental trajectoriesProtoplast/nuclear isolation stress; loss of spatial context; data sparsity, strong batch effectsSingle-cell or nucleus, but dissociated from tissueRich-Griffin et al., 2020; Lee et al., 2025
Spatial transcriptomicsMaps gene expression to tissue context; preserves partial positional gradientsResolution is often multicellular; no chromatin or protein activitySpatial (10–100 µm spots), transcriptome onlyGiolai et al., 2
019; Li et al., 2024 Lee et al., 2025
MALDI-IMSLabel-free mapping of metabolites, lipids, proteins in tissue; partially preserves distributionNo chromatin info; limited subcellular resolution; cannot capture dynamics or cell–cell interactionsSpatial (10–50 µm), metabolite/protein levelVats et al., 2024; Shiono et al., 2024
Spatial cell biology in situIntegrates 3D organ imaging, chromatin architecture, cell/nuclear mechanosensing, cell geometry, protein localization (e.g., PLA) in organ coordinate systemTechnically complex; high data integration demandsTrue multi-layer in situ resolution (3D chromatin, cell geometry, developmental gradients, protein interactions)Shaw et al., 2021; Pasternak et al., 2015; Pasternak&Perez, 2021; Caballero et al., 2024

Key references

  • Caballero, L., Pasternak, T., Riyazuddin, R., & Pérez-Pérez, J. M. (2024). Connecting high-resolution 3D chromatin maps with cell division and cell differentiation at the root apical meristem. Plant Cell Reports43(10), 232.
  • Pasternak, T., & Pérez-Pérez, J. M. (2021). Methods of in situ quantitative root biology. Plants10(11), 2399.
  • Teale, W. D., Pasternak, T., Dal Bosco, C., Dovzhenko, A., Kratzat, K., Bildl, W., … & Palme, K. (2021). Flavonol‐mediated stabilization of PIN efflux complexes regulates polar auxin transport. The EMBO journal40(1), e104416.
  • Pasternak T., Falk T., Paponov I. (2020) Deep-resolution plant phenotyping platform description. dx.doi.org/10.17504/protocols.io.brsdm6a6
  • Pasternak, T., Tietz, O., Rapp, K., Begheldo, M., Nitschke, R., Ruperti, B., & Palme, K. (2015). Protocol: an improved and universal procedure for whole-mount immunolocalization in plants. Plant methods11(1), 50.
  • Pasternak T., Yaroshko O. (2026) Molecular Biology Needs a Map: Spatial In Situ Approaches in Plant Science. Plant Biology, accepted